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U. S. Grant

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Ulysses S. Grant (born Hiram Ulysses Grant; April 27, 1822 July 23, 1885) was the 18th President of the United States (1869 1877) following his dominant role in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: U. S. Grant


1
U. S. Grant
Civil War Hero
2
Ulysses S. Grant (born Hiram Ulysses Grant
  • April 27, 1822 July 23, 1885) was the 18th
    President of the United States (18691877)
    following his dominant role in the second half of
    the Civil War. Under Grant, the Union Army
    defeated the Confederate military and effectively
    ended the war with the surrender of Robert E.
    Lee's army at Appomattox.

3
  • Hiram Ulysses Grant was born in Point Pleasant,
    Ohio on April 27, 1822. His father Jesse Root
    Grant (17941873) was a self-reliant tanner
    (leather producer) and businessman of English
    ancestry, from an austere family. His mother
    Hannah Simpson Grant (17981883) was of Scottish
    ancestry. Both were natives of Pennsylvania. In
    the fall of 1823, the family moved to the village
    of Georgetown in Brown County, Ohio

4
  • Grant was neither disciplined, baptized, nor
    forced to attend church by his parents. Grant is
    said to have inherited a degree of introversion
    from his reserved, even "uncommonly detached"
    mother.

5
Work ethic
  • Grant assumed the duties expected of him as a
    young man at home, which primarily included
    maintaining the firewood supply he thereby
    developed a noteworthy ability to work with, and
    control, horses in his charge, and used this in
    providing transportation as a vocation in his
    youth

6
Education
  • At the age of 17, with the help of his father,
    Grant was nominated by Congressman Thomas L.
    Hamer for a position at the United States
    Military Academy at West Point, New York. Hamer
    mistakenly nominated him as "Ulysses S. Grant of
    Ohio." At West Point, he adopted this name with a
    middle initial only. His nickname became "Sam"
    among army colleagues at the academy, since the
    initials "U.S." stood for "Uncle Sam". The "S",
    according to Grant, did not "stand for anything",
    though Hamer had used it to abbreviate his
    mother's maiden name

7
West Point
  • Grant, then standing at 5 feet 2 inches and
    weighing 117 lbs., graduated from West Point in
    1843, ranking 21st in a class of 39. Part of
    Grant's demerits were due to his refusal, at
    times, of compulsory church attendance, then a
    West Point policy that Grant viewed as
    anti-republican. Grant freely admitted that he
    was lax in his studies however, he achieved
    above average grades in mathematics and geology.

8
  • Grant established a reputation as a fearless and
    expert horseman, setting an equestrian high jump
    record that lasted almost 25 years. Grant later
    recalled that his departure from West Point was
    of the happiest of his times, and that his intent
    had been to resign his commission after serving
    the minimum term of obligated duty. Although
    naturally suited for cavalry, he was assigned to
    duty as a regimental quartermaster, managing
    supplies and equipment in the 4th U.S. Infantry,
    and achieved the rank of brevet second lieutenant

9
Mexican War
  • During the Mexican American War (18461848),
    Lieutenant Grant served under Generals Zachary
    Taylor and Winfield Scott. Discontent with his
    responsibilities as a quartermaster, Grant made
    his way to the front lines to engage in the
    battle, and participated as a de-facto cavalryman
    in the battles of Resaca de la Palma, Palo Alto,
    Monterrey, and Veracruz

10
  • He detailed his reflections on the war in his
    memoirs, indicating he had learned extensively by
    closely observing the decisions and actions of
    his commanding officers, particularly admiring
    Zachary Taylor's methods, and in retrospect
    identified himself with Taylor's style.

11
Hardscrabble
  • On August 22, 1848 after a four year engagement,
    Grant married Julia Boggs Dent (18261902), the
    daughter of a prominent Missouri plantation and
    slave owner, and sister of a West Point roommate,
    Frederick.20 He and Julia had four children
    Frederick Dent Grant Ulysses S. "Buck" Grant,
    Jr. Ellen Wrenshall "Nellie" Grant and Jesse
    Root Grant

12
  • In subsequent years Capt. "Sam" Grant served at a
    variety of bleak army posts. Lonely for his wife
    and son (he had married Julia Dent in 1848), the
    taciturn, unhappy captain began drinking. Warned
    by his commanding officer, Grant resigned from
    the Army in July 1854. He borrowed money for
    transportation to St. Louis, Mo., where he joined
    his family and tried a series of occupations
    without much success farmer, realtor, candidate
    for county engineer, and customshouse clerk. He
    was working as a store clerk at the beginning of
    the Civil War in 1861.

13
  • As a general in the Civil War, Ulysses S. Grant
    possessed the right qualities for prosecuting
    offensive warfare against the brilliant tactics
    of his Southern adversary Robert E. Lee. Bold and
    indefatigable, Grant believed in destroying enemy
    armies rather than merely occupying enemy
    territory. His strategic genius and tenacity
    overcame the Confederates' advantage of fighting
    a defensive war on their own territory.

14
  • This was a war Grant did believe in, and he
    offered his services. The governor of Illinois
    appointed him colonel of the 21st Illinois
    Volunteers in June 1861. Grant took his regiment
    to Missouri, where, to his surprise, he was
    promoted to brigadier general.
  • Grant persuaded his superiors to authorize an
    attack on Ft. Henry on the Tennessee River and
    Ft. Donelson on the Cumberland in order to gain
    Union control of these two important rivers.
    Preceded by gunboats, Grant's 17,000 troops
    marched out of Cairo, Ill., on Feb. 2, 1862.
    After Ft. Henry surrendered, the soldiers took
    Ft. Donelson. Here Confederate general Simon B.
    Buckner, one of Grant's West Point classmates
    (and the man who, much earlier, had loaned the
    impecunious captain the money to rejoin his
    family), requested an armistice. Grant's reply
    became famous "No terms except an unconditional
    and immediate surrender can be accepted. I
    propose to move immediately upon your works."
    Buckner surrendered. One of the first important
    Northern victories of the war, the capture of Ft.
    Donelson won Grant promotion to major general.

15
Shiloh
  • Grant next concentrated 38,000 men at Pittsburgh
    Landing (Shiloh) on the Tennessee River,
    preparing for an offensive. He unwisely neglected
    to prepare for a possible Confederate
    counteroffensive. At dawn on April 6, 1862, the
    Confederate attack surprised the sleeping Union
    soldiers. Grant did his best to prevent a rout,
    and at the end of the day Union lines still held,
    but the Confederates were in command of most of
    the field. The next day the Union Army
    counterattacked with 25,000 fresh troops, who had
    arrived during the night, and drove the
    Southerners into full retreat. The North had
    triumphed in one of the bloodiest battles of the
    war, but Grant was criticized for his
    carelessness. Urged to replace Grant, President
    Abraham Lincoln refused, saying, "I can't spare
    this man - he fights."

16
Vicksburg
  • Grant set out to recoup his reputation and secure
    Union control of the Mississippi River by taking
    the rebel stronghold at Vicksburg, Miss.Several
    attempts were frustrated in the North criticism
    of Grant was growing and there were reports that
    he had begun drinking heavily.

17
  • But in April 1863 Grant embarked on a bold scheme
    to take Vicksburg. While he marched his 20,000
    men past the fortress on the opposite (west)
    bank, an ironclad fleet sailed by the batteries.
    The flotilla rendezvoused with Grant below the
    fort and transported the troops across the river.
    In one of the most brilliant gambles of the war,
    Grant cut himself off from his base in the midst
    of enemy territory with numerically inferior
    forces. The gamble paid off. Grant drove one
    Confederate Army from the city of Jackson, then
    turned and defeated a second force at Champion's
    Hill, forcing the rebels to withdraw to Vicksburg
    on May 20. Union troops laid siege to Vicksburg,
    and on July 4 the garrison surrendered.

18
Significance of Vicksbrg
  • Thus, the Confederacy was cut in two. Coming at
    the same time as the Northern victory at
    Gettysburg, this was the turning point of the
    war.

19
Lookout Mountain
  • Grant was given command of the Western
    Department, and in the fall of 1863 he took
    command of the Union Army pinned down at
    Chattanooga after its defeat in the Battle of
    Chickamauga. In a series of battles on November
    23, 24, and 25, the rejuvenated Northern troops
    dislodged the besieging Confederates, the most
    spirited infantry charge of the war climaxing the
    encounter. It was a great victory Congress
    created the rank of lieutenant general for Grant,
    who was placed in command of all the armies of
    the Union.

20
  • Grant was at the summit of his career. A reticent
    man, unimpressive in physical appearance, he gave
    few clues to the reasons for his success. He
    rarely communicated his thinking he was the
    epitome of the strong, silent type. But Grant had
    deep resources of character, a quietly forceful
    personality that won the respect and confidence
    of subordinates, and a decisiveness and bulldog
    tenacity that served him well in planning and
    carrying out military operations.

21
  • In the spring of 1864 the Union armies launched a
    coordinated offensive designed to bring the war
    to an end. However, Lee brilliantly staved off
    Grant's stronger Army of the Potomac in a series
    of battles in Virginia. Union forces suffered
    fearful losses, especially at Cold Harbor, while
    war weariness and criticism of Grant as a
    "butcher" mounted in the North.

22
  • Lee moved into entrenchments at Petersburg, Va.,
    and Grant settled down there for a long siege.
    Meanwhile, Gen. William T. Sherman captured
    Atlanta and began his march through Georgia,
    South Carolina, and North Carolina, cutting what
    remained of the Confederacy into pieces. In the
    spring of 1865 Lee fell back to Appomattox, where
    on April 9 he met Grant in the courthouse to
    receive the generous terms of surrender.

23
Postwar
  • Grant's postwar career was decidedly
    anticlimactic. To be sure, he was elected as a
    Republican to two terms as president (1869-1877),
    but his administrations were marred by indecisive
    leadership, an inconsistent policy on southern
    Reconstruction, and massive corruption. Coupled
    with a severe economic depression that began in
    1873, administration scandals cost Grant much of
    his popularity. Nonetheless, his presidency did
    have some solid accomplishments. The Treaty of
    Washington in 1872 resolved a major dispute with
    Great Britain over damages inflicted on American
    shipping by Confederate raiders built in British
    shipyards during the Civil War. The Enforcement
    Acts of 1870-1871 broke the power of the Ku Klux
    Klan in the Reconstruction South, and the Civil
    Rights Act of 1875 marked an unprecedented
    attempt to extend federal protection of black
    civil rights to areas of public accommodations.

24
Grant Memorial
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